'This Is Big Oil's Big Tobacco Moment': Trial Over ExxonMobil's Climate Crimes Begins in New York

Supporters of the New York Attorney General's case against ExxonMobil gathered outside the New York County Supreme Court on Oct. 22. (Photo: Lindsay Meiman/Twitter)

Dozens of climate activists rallied outside the New York County Supreme Court Tuesday to support state Attorney General Letitia James on the first day of a nationally watched case that aims to hold ExxonMobil accountable for defrauding investors about the business risks of continuing to burn fossil fuels.

"This is Big Oil's Big Tobacco moment. And a warning for Big Polluters across the globe and the industries that continue to enable them in fueling the climate crisis."—Sriram Madhusoodanan, Corporate Accountability

Supporters of the People of New York v. ExxonMobil trial, which is expected to last three weeks, carried a 100-foot long banner that read, "Climate Crisis / #ExxonKnew / Make Them Pay."

"We're here today in solidarity with Attorney General James, honoring all the Black women, people of color, and frontline communities fighting relentlessly for climate justice," Dominique Thomas, a New Yorker and Northeast field organizer for the environmental group 350.org, said in a statement.

"The likes of Exxon have put us on a first name with climate chaos: Sandy, Maria, Katrina, Paradise lost. The list goes on and on," Thomas added. "It's time to make them pay for their destruction."

We’re outside the New York Supreme Court in support of State Attorney General @TishJames’ lawsuit against ExxonMobil. #ExxonKnew about the climate crisis for decades and suppressed the truth. It’s time to #MakeThemPay for the damage they’ve done to our communities & climate pic.twitter.com/k7paHO14RD

James' predecessor Barbara Underwood filed suit against ExxonMobil in October of 2018, after New York state investigated the fossil fuel giant for more than three years. The lawsuit accuses (pdf) the company of engaging in a "longstanding fraudulent scheme" to deceive investors "concerning the company's management of the risks posed to its business by climate change."

Although the case isn't directly about ExxonMobil's contributions to the human-caused climate crisis, the state's investigation—launched by Underwood's predecessor Eric Schneiderman—became public in 2015, shortly after the Los Angeles Times and InsideClimate News published explosive reports detailing the company's decades of "manufacturing doubt about the scientific consensus that its own scientists had confirmed."

"Corporate deception regarding the impact of fossil fuels on the planet is a matter of life or death," Adelynne Dadivas, environmental coordinator for NYPIRG, said Tuesday. "Harm to investors is one small part of the gross harm being caused, which generations to come will have to pay for. We support Attorney General Letitia James and her efforts to hold Exxon accountable for decades of attacks on the science and deception peddled to the public."

ExxonMobil, The New York Timesreported Tuesday, "has vigorously fought the charges, arguing that they were politically motivated and should have been thrown out; the company maintains that the government's theory of its financial tools is flawed at best and, at worst, disingenuous."

Kathy Mulvey, fossil fuel accountability campaign director at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said that "ExxonMobil pulled out all the stops in an effort to keep this trial from reaching the courtroom, and used its vast legal and financial resources to attempt to intimidate community leaders, elected officials, and advocacy groups."

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New York state prosecutors, in August court filings, accused ExxonMobil of trying to discourage witnesses from testifying against the company. In response, 350.org executive director May Boeve declared, "We won't be intimidated."

As the trial began in the New York, ExxonMobil faced the prospect of a second suit: Bloomberg reported last week that after threatening litigation for more than three years, "Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey is poised to sue ExxonMobil Corp. for allegedly deceiving consumers about the climate-warming impacts of fossil fuels."

ExxonMobil is also named in various climate liability cases filed by cities, counties, and the state of Rhode Island that aim to make polluters pay for the local consequences of the planetary crisis, such as more devastating natural disasters and rising sea levels.

The multi-pronged fight to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for fueling the climate crisis has provoked comparisons to the U.S. Justice Department's multibillion-dollar racketeering case against the tobacco industry over the dangers of smoking cigarettes.

Recalling a conversation from four years ago with Sharon Eubanks, a former DOJ attorney who prosecuted the cigarette case, climate reporter Emily Atkin addressed "how Big Oil mimics Big Tobacco" in her newsletter HEATED on Monday:

The parallels were as clear then as they are today. "The cigarette companies actively denied the harm of cigarette smoking, and concealed the results of what their own research developed," Eubanks told me at the time. "The motivation was money, and to avoid regulation."

Documents revealed three years ago by the Center for International Environmental Law found that the oil and tobacco industries have been using not only the same strategy, but the the same people, to downplay the dangers of their products. "From the 1950s onward, the oil and tobacco firms were using not only the same PR firms and same research institutes, but many of the same researchers," CIEL President Carroll Muffett said in a statement. "Again and again we found both the PR firms and the researchers worked first for oil, then for tobacco. It was a pedigree the tobacco companies recognized and sought out."

As Sriram Madhusoodanan of Corporate Accountability put it Tuesday: "This is Big Oil's Big Tobacco moment. And a warning for Big Polluters across the globe and the industries that continue to enable them in fueling the climate crisis."

"It's time for people in the U.S. and around the world to stand with courageous leaders like AG James and demand true climate leadership of all our government officials," Madhusoodanan said. "It's time to make Big Polluters pay."

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Further

Prepping for Saturday's protests in D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser went for the grand gesture - and a symbolic middle finger to the racist cowering in the White House - and had "Black Lives Matter" painted in yuge yellow letters on the city's main drag. Bowser's action, aimed at recognizing the thousands in the streets "craving to be heard and to be seen," was criticized by some activists as "performative distraction," but many celebrated it as a vital tribute: "We are saying it loud. We are here."

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